OPEC meets as Trump calls for oil taps to be kept on

Over the past two months, however, prices have plunged again and a barrel of Brent crude, the European benchmark, currently stands at around $60. Image: REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

OPEC members and other oil-producing countries gather in Vienna on Thursday to discuss cutting output to prop up prices, as US President Donald Trump urged them to keep the faucets open.

Oil ministers from 20 or so countries busily criss-crossed the Austrian capital on Wednesday for preparatory negotiations ahead of the two-day meet at the headquarters of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Delegates remained relatively tight-lipped about what had been agreed in a flurry of closed-door meetings in some of Vienna's most exclusive hotels, even as Trump took to Twitter to urge producers to keep pumping to ensure that the commodity remains affordable.

"Hopefully OPEC will be keeping oil flows as is, not restricted. The World does not want to see, or need, higher oil prices!" said Trump, who has in the past repeatedly accused the cartel of keeping prices artificially high.

At the end of 2016, OPEC's regular members joined forces with other countries outside the cartel to jointly scale back output in a bid to reduce a glut supply that was weighing on prices at the time.

The coordinated move -- which has since been extended -- stimulated a long rally in oil prices right up until October 2018.

Over the past two months, however, prices have plunged again and a barrel of Brent crude, the European benchmark, currently stands at around $60.

Cuts on the cards?

In the light of this, the so-called OPEC+ -- which accounts for more than half of the world's oil -- has come to Vienna to discuss renewing the pact or perhaps even throttling output still further.

All the signals suggested that more reductions in output are on the cards, despite the pressure from Trump, who argues that closing off the taps could choke off the economy, which needs affordable oil to keep running.

"Yes, we will have a cut," said Oman's oil minister Mohammed bin Hamad Al Rumhi. "We will have time to sort out the details by tomorrow (Thursday)."

His Nigerian counterpart also suggested that a reduction in output was possible.

However, OPEC's third-biggest producer Iran called to be exempted from any such measures.